The widely successful Inside Out has finally hit DVD/Blu-ray. Recent Pixar fare has not been a true reflection of the poignant emotions you would normally feel while watching films about toys, seniors who go out on one last adventure, clown fish, and tiny robots. So it seems fitting that Pixar’s latest film brings that poignancy home by focusing on the emotions that drive us: Joy, Sadness, Disgust, Anger, and Fear. We all have these emotions, which makes the film that much more relatable – there are arguments that there are different numbers of emotions, but for narrative sake, directors Pete Docter and Ronnie Del Carmen focused on these five.

Disney/Pixar’s Inside Out is coming out this Tuesday, November 3, 2015, as a Blu-ray/DVD Combo Pack, so in conjunction with this release, we have one (1) download code for the digital version of the film to give away to one lucky reader!

Tweet us anything you want about the movie, Disney, or life in general — or, say nothing, it’s up to you. Just as long as you follow the Rules. If you want to unfollow us after the Contest, that’s OK, but we hope you stick around.

I grew up in Brooklyn, New York, in a family that ritualistically watched ABC’s World News Tonight with Peter Jennings. I loved history and journalism, and ended up teaching high school level history. The calming, straight forward, no nonsense, nonpartisan news days have long since passed. With the advent and expansion of cable news, and the big money filing in, it’s incredibly difficult to find real, genuine news. As channels like Fox News went over-the-top conservative, stations like MSNBC had to hit back equally to the left. 16 years ago a phoenix rose over the garbage heap of the phony “real” news and gave us the greatest fake news show ever. 16 years after taking over for Craig Kilborn, Jon Stewart left The Daily Show last night, in perfect circumstances… as the Republicans were holding their first Presidential debates on Fox News.

Four years ago at D23 Expo 2011, Pixar announced what would be its 15th feature film: Inside Out. Two years later came news of the cast and the respective characters. The first time I witnessed early footage I experienced a mix of hope and hilarity. After what has felt like an endless wait, the movie is finally out. Disney•Pixar has developed a gift, a film that sensibly pushes the limits of animation and stretches what our brains can comprehend in a comfortable, if not “mind-blowing” hour-and-a-half format.

Let’s examine Inside Out, in terms of what it is composed of and what this movie can mean for the future of the studio.

Ever look at someone and wonder what’s going on inside their head? Directed by Pete Docter (Up, Monsters, Inc.) and Ronnie Del Carmen, Inside Out journeys into the mind to find out.

Based in Headquarters, the control center inside 11-year old Riley’s mind, the Emotions are hard at work. Joy (Amy Poehler) is a silly sprite whose mission is to make sure Riley stays happy. Fear (Bill Hader) keeps Riley safe, and Anger (Lewis Black) ensures all is fair. Disgust (Mindy Kaling) prevents Riley from getting poisoned and protects her from gross stuff like broccoli, while Sadness (Phyllis Smith) isn’t sure what her role in Riley’s life is – she tries to stay out of the way as much as possible.

This week, Disney•Pixar’s Inside Out hits theaters, and the cast sat down to talk about how they became a part of one of Pixar’s most out of the box concepts for an animated feature. Amy Poehler, Bill Hader, Mindy Kaling, Phyllis Smith, and Lewis Black, play the emotions inside the head of an 11-year old girl coping with moving to a new town.

This is what the cast had to say about being approached to work on the film.

The marketing machine is still full steam ahead for Inside Out, the newest release from Pixar Animation, whose last movie was 2013’s Monsters University.

Another new clip from the movie has been released online, simply titled “Pizza.” In it the young girl whose brain the movie is mainly set in, Riley, distracts herself from a bit of sadness with something most of us have distracted ourselves from a bit of sadness with, as you probably already guessed, pizza.

Click on over to the other side to check out the new Inside Out clip, as well as a new TV spot.

Disney•Pixar has released a pair of new clips from their upcoming human emotion movie Inside Out. You can see previous trailers, clips, and news for the movie you might have missed right here.

The first clip sees emotions Joy and Sadness about to embark on a journey into the labyrinth that is a person’s long term memory. The second clip sees emotions Disgust and Anger dealing with a broccoli situation between young Riley and her father.

You can read a full synopsis and check out the two new clips from Inside Out below.

Disney•Pixar has announced that their upcoming animated feature Inside Out—the first Pixar movie since 2013’s Monsters University which follows the various emotions at work inside the head of young Riley—will make its world premiere at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival.

In celebration of the announcement, the first clip for the movie has been released online, and can be watched below. In it, Joy strategizes Riley’s first day of school with fellow emotions Fear, Anger, Disgust, and Sadness.

Just by looking at the last two trailers for Pete Docter‘s Inside Out, Pixar’s upcoming animated film, its easy to think that the plot lacks a certain depth. The initial premise follows the five emotions of an 11-year-old girl named Riley, who has to come to terms with her family moving and leaving all her good friends behind.

The trailers have revealed that everyone has the same five emotions, and for the film the ones in Riley’s mind are Joy (Amy Poehler), Sadness (Phyllis Smith), Anger (Lewis Black), Disgust (Mindy Kaling), and Fear (Bill Hader). As we’ve seen before, and emotional outburst at Riley HQ puts a rift between her and her parents. And now the latest trailer reveals what lead to this, and gets deeper into the plot as well as the world beyond the emotion’s HQ. Hit the jump to check out the latest trailer for Inside Out.